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2 state pursuit begins in Fremont County

News

April 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A two-state pursuit Thursday that began in Fremont County, ended in Nebraska with the suspect crashing into three sheriff’s department vehicles and an arrest. The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office reports 39-year old Jay Rickman, of Eagle, NE., was finally arrested with the assistance of a Fremont County K9 Unit. The incident began, when the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office received a call of a possible wanted subject staying at a hotel in Percival, Iowa. Deputies were advised the subject was possibly armed, and had made statements that he would kill law enforcement if they attempted to arrest him.

Deputies attempted to stop a 1999 Chrysler Sebring at the intersection of 195th Street and Highway 2, when the vehicle fled the area and traveled west on Highway 2 reaching speeds of about 115mph. The vehicle continued west on Hwy 2 into Nebraska, where Otoe County deputies began leading the pursuit. The vehicle attempted to turn north on Highway 43, west of Palmyra, NE., when it went out of control. The vehicle then rammed an Otoe County Deputy’s vehicle, causing disabling damage. The car then rammed a Fremont County vehicle, causing minor damage, and rammed a second Fremont County vehicle, causing extensive damage to the deputy’s vehicle and disabling the suspect vehicle.

Charges against Rickman are pending in Fremont County for Felony Eluding from law enforcement.

Update coming soon in search for missing NE Iowa teen

News

April 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

An update is expected this (Friday) afternoon on the search for a missing autistic boy in northeast Iowa. Law officers involved in the search, centered in Black Hawk County, are holding a news conference at 2 o’clock this afternoon. Reports indicate there is -no- news on the whereabouts of 16-year-old Jake Wilson. He walked away from his home in LaPorte City almost two weeks ago, the night of April 7th. Hundreds of volunteers had joined in the search, which was scaled back in recent days.

Backyard & Beyond 4-20-2018

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

April 20th, 2018 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen visits with Lucy Netwon and Marcia Weis of the Cass County Memorial Hospital Auxiliary about the Spring Soup and Salad Luncheon of Wednesday, April 25.

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Former ISU football coach Earle Bruce passes at the age of 87

Sports

April 20th, 2018 by admin

AMES, Iowa – Former Iowa State head football coach Earle Bruce, who led the Cyclones to three-straight eight-win seasons and two Bowl games, passed away early this morning at the age of 87.

Bruce was hired as the head football coach at Iowa State in 1973, replacing Johnny Majors, who left for Pittsburgh after the 1972 season.

Bruce, who arrived at Iowa State after directing Tampa to the 1972 Tangerine Bowl, led the Cyclones during one of their most prosperous periods in school history from 1973-78. He tallied a career 36-32 mark as the Cyclone mentor, but in his last three seasons (1976-78), the Cyclones went 24-11 and earned bowl bids in 1977 (Peach Bowl) and 1978 (Hall of Fame Bowl).

Bruce left Iowa State after the 1978 season to return to his alma mater Ohio State, replacing the legendary Woody Hayes. He won or shared four Big Ten titles in his nine seasons as the leader of the Buckeyes. He was the AFCA National Coach-of-the-Year in 1979.

A 2002 College Football Hall of Fame inductee, Bruce compiled a career 154-90-2 record as a head coach, which also included stops at Northern Iowa and Colorado State. In his 20 years as a head coach at the Division I-A level, he led his teams to 12 bowl appearances, including seven victories.

Bruce graduated from Ohio State in 1953 and earned his master’s degree from Kent State in 1963.

He was inducted into the Iowa State Hall of Fame in 2000.

High School Track Scoreboard 04/19/2018

Sports

April 20th, 2018 by admin

Tiger-Knight Co-Ed Relays at Denison

Boys

  1. Atlantic 175
  2. CB Abraham Lincoln 107
  3. Denison-Schleswig 90
  4. Kuemper 89
  5. Carroll 61
  6. Greene County 60

Highlights: Atlantic won 11 events on the night to take the crown. Individual Winners: Zade Niklasen 200M, Chase Mullenix 400M, Craig Becker 800M, Gratt Reed 110M Hurdles, Jaxson Eden 1600M, Jalen Petersen 3200M. Relay Winners: 4x100M, 4x200M, 4x400M, 4X800M, Sprint Medley.

Girls

  1. Denison-Schleswig 141
  2. Atlantic 104
  3. Creston 86
  4. Carroll 59
  5. Boone 58
  6. Greene County 50
  7. Dallas Center-Grimes 49
  8. Kuemper Catholic 41

Highlights: Taylor McCreedy won the 3000M Run for Atlantic.

Full Results: 2018 Tiger-Knight Relays

Griswold Boys Tiger Relays

Division A

  1. Griswold 139
  2. Audubon 107
  3. Southwest Valley 98
  4. Fremont-Mills 86
  5. Riverside 62
  6. Tri-Center 50
  7. Bedford 32

Highlights: Griswold got wins from Preston Good in the 400M and 400M Hurdles and Josh Brownlee in the 1600M and 3200M. Audubon’s Joseph Zaiger won the Discus and Shot Put and was on the winning Distance Medley team for the Wheelers. Skyler Schultes won the 110 Hurdles for Audubon and was on the Sprint Medley winning team for Audubon. Riverside’s Val Andrusyshyn won the 100M and 200M.

Division AA

  1. Underwood 128
  2. Spirit Lake 127
  3. Missouri Valley 106
  4. Shenandoah 73
  5. Treynor 52
  6. Logan-Magnolia 44
  7. Clarinda 40
  8. Red Oak 19

Highlights: Underwood took 5 wins on their way to the team title. Dylan Reimer 110 Hurdles, Brandon Magnuson Discus, Gavin Dominguez Long Jump, 4x800M Relay, and Shuttle Hurdle Relay. Treynor got wins from Noah James in the High Jump and Brock Fox in the Shot Put.

Full Results: 2018 Tiger Relays

Southwest Valley Girls Timberwolf Invitational

  1. Shenandoah 137
  2. Red Oak 65
  3. Nodaway Valley 64
  4. Southwest Valley 48
  5. Clarinda 47
  6. Bedford 44
  7. I-35 38
  8. Griswold 35
  9. East Mills 34
  10. Stanton 31
  11. South Page 14

Highlights: Shenandoah won 4 events on their way to the team title. Nodaway Valley’s Reagan Weinheimer won that 800M. The Wolverines won the Sprint Medley and Shuttle Hurdle Relay as well. East Mills’ Janette Schraft won the 400M Hurdles. Jocelyn Amos of Griswold won the Long Jump.

Full Results: 2018 Girls Timberwold Invitational

Boys Sidney Cowboy Invitational

  1. Sidney 173
  2. Clarinda Academy 96
  3. Glenwood JV 86
  4. East Mills 71
  5. Essex 66
  6. Stanton 41
  7. AHSTW 21
  8. Heartland Christian 4
  9. South Page 4
  10. ISD 4

Highlights: Stanton’s Drake Johnson won the 110 Hurdles and 400M Hurdles.

Full Results: 2018 Boys Sidney Cowboy Invitational

Girls AL/TJ Invitational

  1. CB Abraham Lincoln 115
  2. Glenwood 109
  3. Bishop Heelan 105
  4. Treynor 95
  5. Lewis Central 75
  6. Logan-Magnolia 74
  7. CB Thomas Jefferson 62.5
  8. Harlan 45.5
  9. Fremont-Mills 30
  10. CB St. Albert 26
  11. Heartland Christian 3

Full Results: 2018 AL/TJ Invitational

OA-BCIG Co-Ed

Girls

  1. KP-WC 145
  2. OA-BCIG 88
  3. MVAO-COU 76
  4. IKM-Manning 65
  5. Sheldon 65
  6. Boyer Valley 50
  7. Ridge View 33
  8. MMCRU 30
  9. Ar-We-Va 27
  10. Siouxland Christian

Highlights: Payton Sporrer of IKM-Manning was 2nd in the 400M and the Wolves 4x800M team was 2nd.

Full Results: 2018 OA-BCIG Girls

Boys

  1. Humboldt 97
  2. OA-BCIG 92
  3. Sheldon 77
  4. IKM-Manning 55
  5. KP-WC 54
  6. West Sioux 52
  7. Ridge View 40
  8. MVAO-COU 30
  9. Boyer Valley 29
  10. West Hancock 22
  11. MMCRU 18
  12. Ar-We-Va 15
  13. OA-BCIG JV 8

Highlights: Jared Johnson of IKM-Manning won the High Jump.

Full Results: 2018 OA-BCIG Boys

WCV Co-Ed Wildcat Relays

Girls

  1. AC/GC 169
  2. Van Meter 118
  3. West Central Valley 81
  4. Ogden 69
  5. Glidden-Ralston 64
  6. Woodward-Granger 59
  7. CAM 23
  8. Iowa Christian Academy 2

Highlights: AC/GC picked up wins from Audrey Stowe 800M, Kate Crawford 1500M and 3000M, Mady McDermott Discus, Sara Schmeling Long Jump. The Chargers also won the 4x100M, 4x200M, and Distance Medley Relays.

Full Results: 2018 WCV Wildcat Relays

Boys

  1. Van Meter 148
  2. AC/GC 144
  3. WCV 84
  4. Woodward-Granger 79
  5. Iowa Christian Academy 37
  6. Glidden-Ralston 34
  7. Ogden 28
  8. Ankeny Christian 26
  9. Paton-Churdan 9

Highlights: AC/GC picked up wins from Dylan Soper 100M, Clay Billheimer 400M and 800M and 1600M, Noah Nelsen 3200M, and Caden Wardyn Long Jump.

Full Results: 2018 WCV Wildcat Relays

Waukee Invitational

Boys AA

  1. Waukee 197.83
  2. Lewis Central 111.33
  3. Ankeny 96.5
  4. DM Roosevelt 96
  5. Ankeny Centennial 89.5
  6. Indianola 65.83
  7. CB Thomas Jefferson 43
  8. Fort Dodge 36

Full Results: 2018 Waukee Invitational

East Union Eagle Relays Co-Ed

Girls

  1. Panorama 197
  2. Central Decatur 109
  3. Murray 75
  4. East Union 66
  5. Des Moines Christian 48
  6. Lamoni 44
  7. Mormon Trail 28
  8. Orient-Macksburg 11

Boys

  1. Des Moines Christian 180
  2. Panorama 164
  3. East Union 71
  4. Lamoni 69
  5. Central Decatur 35
  6. Murray 19
  7. Lenox 19
  8. Orient-Macksburg 18
  9. Mormon Trail 7

Full Results: 2018 East Union Eagle Relays CoEd

Former Iowa coach sentenced for Nebraska sex assault

News

April 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

SIBLEY, Iowa (AP) — A former football coach and teacher accused of sexually assaulting a child in northwest Iowa has been imprisoned for a similar crime in Nebraska. Court records say 39-year-old Kyle Ewinger was sentenced Thursday to 55 to 85 years and credited for 105 days already served. In January a jury in Omaha found him guilty of sexual assault of a child. Prosecutors say he assaulted the 9-year-old son of a woman he was dating in 2012 and 2013.

Osceola County District Court records in Iowa say the former Sibley-Ocheyedan coach was fired after the district superintendent found him sleeping in his classroom next to a 10-year-old in October 2015.
Ewinger has pleaded not guilty. His trial start was set to begin April 10 but was delayed until Aug. 28.

Pott. County Sheriff’s report, 4/20/18 – three arrested in Neola home described as a “drug house”

News

April 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office said today (Friday), that 39-year old Jacob Benjamin Tuttle, of Omaha, was arrested late Thursday morning in Neola, on a Sarpy County, Nebraska, warrant for being a Fugitive from Justice.  Tuttle was taken into custody after a Pott. County Deputy responded to a residence in the 200 block of 4th Street in Neola, to assist the DHS with a Child welfare check investigation. Altogether, three people were charged with gathering where drugs are used and one person was additionally charged with possession of a controlled substance, marijuana.

Tuttle was additionally charged with Hosting a Drug House and Possession of a Controlled Substance. A resident of the home, 36-year old Staci Lynn Ashley, of Neola, was charged with hosting a drug house, and 28-year old Danni Jo Bohnenkamp, of Council Bluffs was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance. Authorities found 1 gram of methamphetamine and 12.9-grams of marijuana during their investigation into activities at the home.

Frederickson Mem. Fund donates $1,500 to the Atlantic Sports Youth Association

News

April 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Trevor Frederickson Memorial Fund donated $1500.00 to the Atlantic Sports Youth Association to place agrilime on some of the fields at the Atlantic Sports Complex.  Fund spokesperson, and Trevor’s mom, Melanie Petty, said “We are happy to help out such a wonderful organization that our family has personally been involved with for many years.  We look forward to seeing the season start in just a few short weeks.”

Cass County Sheriff Darby McLaren and members of the ASYA.

The 10th Annual TFred Memorial Golf Tournament will be held on Saturday, August 11th at Nishna Hills Golf Course.  This is the organization’s only fundraiser for the year.  You’re asked to consider getting a team together for a fun day of golf or stop out and bid on silent auction items. Petty says “We always have a great day and all money is donated back to the community that Trevor loved.”

The Trevor Frederickson Memorial Fund is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization.

Iowa’s Unemployment Rate Falls to 2.8 Percent in March

News

April 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, IOWA – Iowa’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell to 2.8 percent in March. The state’s jobless rate was 3.3 percent one year ago. The U.S. unemployment rate remained at 4.1 percent in March. Beth Townsend, Iowa Workforce Development Director, said Friday (Today), that  “Iowa’s economy continued to show overall gains in job growth with a drop in the unemployment rate in March to 2.8 percent. Iowa has added a net of 10,600 jobs since last March including manufacturing jobs that increased by 10,400 alone.” Townsend said also, “Iowa currently has 224,200 manufacturing jobs and the number is trending upward.  Increasing the skilled worker labor pool continues to be a pressing issue and the unanimous passage of the Future Ready Iowa Act by the Legislature, signed by Governor Reynolds on April 3, is a significant step in addressing that need.”

The number of unemployed Iowans decreased to 47,300 in March from 47,900 in February. The current estimate is 8,200 lower than the year ago level of 55,500.  The total number of working Iowans increased to 1,626,100 in March. This figure was 500 higher than February and 300 higher than one year ago.

Iowa businesses shed 600 jobs from payrolls in March, lowering total non-farm employment down to 1,582,100 jobs. This is the second decline to begin 2018, and this month’s loss was localized entirely within private services. Goods producing industries added jobs for the second consecutive month. Private services shed 2,100 jobs, completely offsetting a gain of 1,700 last month. Government was little changed versus February and is up 500 jobs compared to last March.

Construction sectors added the most jobs in March (+1,300), marking the second consecutive increase in jobs. This sector experienced declines throughout most of 2017 and to begin the year, so the monthly gains are welcomed news for this industry. Professional, scientific, and technical services advanced by 700 jobs, partially due to gains in law offices and tax preparation services. Elsewhere, gains were seen in finance and insurance (+500), transportation (+300), and arts and entertainment (+300). Alternatively, losses continued to plague retail, which shed 1,800 jobs in March. This sector has steadily trended down since October. Accommodations and food services also lost jobs this month (-1,100) and have lost 1,800 jobs thus far this year. Smaller losses this month included private education (-500), other services (-500), and wholesale trade (-200).

Since last March, a total of 10,600 jobs have been added. Manufacturing continues to trend upward and has increased by 10,400 jobs alone. Durable goods factories have contributed 7,900 jobs added versus 2,500 in nondurable goods workshops. Finance and insurance industries experienced a surge in hiring to end the year and now rests up 2,900 jobs since last March, matching the annual gains in healthcare and social assistance. Following recent declines, retail now trails last year’s mark by 4,600 jobs. Construction also lags behind last year’s level (-3,900); however, this number has been declining as construction has shown signs of hiring over the past few months.

House votes to let townships raise property taxes for ambulance service

News

April 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

This week the Iowa House unanimously passed a bill designed that may give rural Iowans who don’t have ready access to ambulance services another avenue to get it. Representative Zach Nunn of Bondurant says Myrna Hunt’s story about her husband’s heart attack in late 2013 helped spur the action. Hunt told legislators her husband died on their front steps in Runnells, just a couple of blocks away from the volunteer fire department. “She called 911 for the volunteers to come and after 20 minutes she called 911 again and more than an hour later, when the volunteers finally arrived and escorted her husband to a hospital here in Des Moines, he’d already passed away from cardiac arrest,” Nunn said. “This is just one of many tales that come from our volunteers across the state who are doing the best they can with limited resources.”

The bill would let residents in unincorporated areas — outside city limits — petition for a vote that would raise property taxes in the township to pay for emergency medical services. Representative Amy Nielsen, the former mayor of North Liberty, says the lack of access to ambulance services in rural areas is troubling. “I believe that this bill is a good first step in making EMS an essential service, just like fire protection,” Nielsen says. Representative Bobby Kaufmann of Wilton says legislators have been working on this bill for six years. “I think all of us enjoy going to our EMS ambulance service pancake breakfasts, but that’s ridiculous that they have to do that just to be able to fill the gaps in their budget,” Kaufmann says. “…This bill is just a start, but I think it’s a great start.”

The bill now goes to the Senate for review.

(Radio Iowa)